Monday, December 8, 2008

Finally got my computer fixed and set up back in the old den, went looking for my music folder and it was nowhere to be found. After about an hour and a half of searching I found an old one which pretty much contained a good majority of the tracks and moved 'em into the new folder.

This took about 25 minutes or so.

Found my EMusic folder and started downloading certain files from that and then all of a sudden my track listing count went from a paired down 8,000 to well over 14,000! Seems a slip of the finger selected "all" so that's what I got. Problem is, a large portion were duplicates so now I had to start the long task of going through the library looking for duped songs. THIS took over 4 hours.

Now, as I write this, I am downloading individual burned cd's I have purchased through iTunes, which takes an ungodly amount of time anyway, but to add insult to injury it's not recognizing the track names or any other info from the house-burned little plastic info discs!!

Which means I have to go in and personally edit each track including the song name, the album name and the artist. Screw the genre, etc.

So that's where I'm at. If I didn't love it so much I would've abandoned this folly long ago...

5 comments:

Lost my laptop's hard drive last year. Luckily most of the tracks were on my ipod. Transferred them onto the new hard drive and they all went on with no info attached. Had to go through them one by one listening to their intros and then typing in the info. Spent a weekend doing that....

I suggest the portable hard drive as well. But be sure to keep copies of the songs on DVD's.

I had 200 GB of music (all beautifully orgainized, i might add) on a portable hard drive which Windows managed to reformat. Luckily I was able to recover 99% of the music... but it tooks many many days and many many dvd's to do so.

So, get a portable hard drive (magnetic) - and then back it up (optical)!

The lords of popular culture tell us what to wear, what to hear, what to smell, what to taste, who to love and who to hate. They tell us what's in and what's out, what's lost and what's found, who to screw, how to do it, and how to leave gracefully when we're done. None of it is necessarily to our benefit. We just grow more lost and desperate in our own fractured worlds. So much for the Pepsi Generation in the land of the Gap.---by David Pulizzi

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